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China on the move: Ensuring no child is left behind

2009-09-23 12:45 BJT

Special Report: 60th Anniversary of PRC |

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As millions of farmers move into cities for job opportunities, their children are often left behind in the rural areas. It's reported that the number is now more than 4 million. As our reporter Zhang Lu finds out in Sichuan, these children are in need of parental love and care. Poverty reduction is the key to addressing this issue.

It's lunch time. Gu Jinxia and Gu Jinli are cooking. Usually, there is only one dish for each meal. Today it's haricot beans. No one will come to join them. The 14-year-old twin sisters have lived alone for years. Their parents are now working in cities.

Gu Jinli said, "We have lived by ourselves for more than 6 years. It will soon be 7 years. Mother is working in Meishan. Father is in Jiangsu."

Besides taking care of themselves, the two girls also perform all of the housework. They tend to the family's corn and rice farm. They also raise chickens as food for the Chinese lunar new year, when their parents will return.

As China's economy booms, millions of farmers are moving to cities to pursue opportunities. But in most cities, current regulations make it nearly impossible for migrant children to attend school. With little income, many migrant workers have to leave their children at home, unattended and without care.

Jinli and Jinxia frequently go to the village's "Left Behind Children's Care Center" on weekends. Like the twins, many of the children here stay on their own or with just one parent.